Pathologic
Registered user
A 21 day tour with 4 mad Croatians to Syria and Lebanon.
The facts:
just under 7,000 miles (11,000 km)
1 R1200GS SE (mine)
1 R1200GSA (Danilo of this parish)
3 Suzuki Versys (they are all right I suppose
)
16 countries. 3 long border crossings (with no obvious rules) and many shorter ones
Lots of insurances I will never need.
2 speeding tickets
Lots of fun
What's not on the menu
No list of filling stations
No photos of food or Hotels, unless the bikes are featured
No great list of roads travelled
What I hope to give you
A brief overview of the trip and riders
The low (low) down on Syrian and Lebanese border crossings (in the middle East Section)
A report peppered with amazing people and some amazing locations.
A glimpse of how easy it is to go a very long way
Lots of praise for my GS which didn't miss a beat and is running better than ever!
Don't hold your breath, but I will try to start our story very soon. I am still smiling just thinking about it


Regards,
Path

The facts:
just under 7,000 miles (11,000 km)
1 R1200GS SE (mine)
1 R1200GSA (Danilo of this parish)
3 Suzuki Versys (they are all right I suppose
)16 countries. 3 long border crossings (with no obvious rules) and many shorter ones
Lots of insurances I will never need.
2 speeding tickets
Lots of fun
What's not on the menu
No list of filling stations
No photos of food or Hotels, unless the bikes are featured
No great list of roads travelled
What I hope to give you
A brief overview of the trip and riders
The low (low) down on Syrian and Lebanese border crossings (in the middle East Section)
A report peppered with amazing people and some amazing locations.
A glimpse of how easy it is to go a very long way
Lots of praise for my GS which didn't miss a beat and is running better than ever!
Don't hold your breath, but I will try to start our story very soon. I am still smiling just thinking about it



Regards,
Path
I pointed out the bike gear and that I was going in a different direction. It turns out, these two students had been pursuaded to try hitchhiking to Morocco for charity. No back up plan, no experience of hitching and no travel insurance (not even an EHIC card). No marks for planning. Of course hitching a lift from someone on the ferry sounds easy, except there wern't many people and the comercial drivers don't mingle with ordinary mortals and these days can be sacked for picking up hitchhikers. So I showed Colin the main roundabout out of the Calais terminal where they might find a lift and the direction to walk into Calais. He went back to talk to his mate, who apparently, wasn't very happy with him at the moment. Looks like a great start, I wonder how far they got?
It must have seemed such a good idea when they started. 40 minutes of increasingly frantic efforts to 'adjust' the metal work by hitting the support with a very big hammer, bring no joy. The police are looking nervous. I should imagine queue was vast. Meanwhile I did some stretches, had something to at and drink, and took some photos. After all I was on holiday

Tomorrow promised even better.

(or more accurately wide belts